The chief of the U.S. Interests Section in Havana, Michael Parmly, said 
Washington "would not be opposed" to granting Cuba cable access to the 
Internet if the Castro government allows all Cubans to utilize it, the 
Spanish news agency EFE reported Saturday. "U.S. technology companies 
are ready at this moment -- now -- to connect Cuba to the Internet and 
our government would not be opposed," Parmly was reported as telling 
guests at a Fourth of July party. "The only thing missing is for the 
Cuban government to lift its restrictions, lose its fears and begin to 
trust its own people." The U.S. trade embargo bars Cuba from tapping the 
underwater Internet cable that runs from Miami to Cancún, Mexico, only 
20 miles from Havana, so Cuba must use satellite connections, which are 
more expensive than cable and technologically more restricting. For that 
reason, Cuba limits its citizens' private use of the Internet, favoring 
its "social use" by state-run institutions. Parmly's comment may have 
been in response to criticism of Washington's Internet policy voiced 
frequently during the Journalists' Union congress last week in Havana.
---Renato Pérez Pizarro.
July 06, 2008
http://miamiherald.typepad.com/cuban_colada/2008/07/internet-access.html
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